Agent Lion

Book Cover
Average Rating
Series
Agent Lion volume 1
Publisher
Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers
Publication Date
[2020]
Language
English

Description

From the New York Times bestselling creators of Ladybug Girl, meet Agent Lion: a charmingly oblivious yet always-on-time detective!

MS. FLAMINGO’S CAT, FLUFFY, IS MISSING…and there’s only one detective who can crack the case!

Meet Agent Lion—he works at Super Detective Agents Agency, wears a tiny blue hat, and loves jelly doughnuts. But most importantly, he is determined to find Fluffy.

Agent Lion searches all over Mrs. Flamingo’s building—from Mr. Wombat’s apartment to the top of the roof—and the missing cat is nowhere to be found. Will Agent Lion ever crack the case?

In an upside-down mystery filled with laugh-out-loud moments, twists and turns, and more zany animals than one can count, David Soman and Jacky Davis have crafted the perfect picture book for curious minds who enjoy a good detective tale.

Agent Lion is sure not only to make readers giggle but to prove that anything is possible with a bit of determination and wit, and a few jelly doughnut breaks.

More Details

Contributors
ISBN
9780062869173

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Also in this Series

  • Agent Lion (Agent Lion Volume 1) Cover
  • Agent Lion and the case of the missing party (Agent Lion Volume 2) Cover

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Each of these funny picture books features a gumshoe detective from the animal kingdom solving a head-scratching case. Both books will provide laughs for parents and kids alike (and inspire a need for donuts). -- Lindsey Dunn
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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

Dressed in a trench coat and fedora, Agent Lion has a cheery disposition and an ardent love for jelly doughnuts--but as a detective, he's got some shortcomings. Husband-and-wife creators Soman and Davis (the Ladybug Girl series) channel the old Pink Panther films but with an all-animal cast. Clear panel artwork provides plenty of comic contradiction as Agent Lion heads over to Ms. Flamingo's apartment building to talk to her about her missing cat, Fluffy. "He took the absolutely most direct route," the text says, while a double-page aerial view tells another story: Agent Lion makes stops at Donut World, Popcorn Palace, and more before arriving two hours later. "Does Fluffy have a trunk?" he asks Ms. Flamingo helpfully, and goofy scenarios follow: "No one move!" Agent Lion says, pointing to a rooftop creature. "Agent Lion," says an exasperated Ms. Flamingo, "That is a pigeon." After further investigations, and almost in spite of himself, Agent Lion solves the case. As a bonus, a spread of Ms. Flamingo's lobby features Easter eggs: an elephant cast as Christina in a version of the Wyeth painting, a monkey resembling Thompson's Eloise, and plentiful other animal heroes just right for curious readers. Ages 4--8. (Feb.)

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Horn Book Review

Ms. Flamingos cat Fluffy is missing, but Agent Lion is on the casesort of. He means well and works hardhe is often shown with his tongue at the side of his mouth, like a child concentrating intentlybut hes far from sharp-witted. During his investigation, he asks Ms. Flamingo if Fluffy has antlers and tries to peg a pigeon as the cat in disguise. As the lovable, bike-riding, snack-loving detective tries to find Fluffy, readers explore his town and the characters therein, rendered in pale watercolors; light teals and pinks with touches of vivid purple mark this cozy community of anthropomorphized animals. Occasional intentional contradictions in text and art accentuate the humor: the line He took the absolutely most direct route is illustrated with an aerial view of Agent Lions circuitous path to Ms. Flamingos home, marked by stops for popcorn, ice cream, and jelly donuts (his favorite). Expect more giggles over the visual hyperbole, such as a tall apartment building bending over due to the loud wails of Ms. Hippos babies, awakened from their nap by Agent Lion. This spin on the bumbling detective trope will delight readers; children love to see a grown-up making so many mistakes, and Agent Lion has personality to spare. Julie Danielson January/February 2020 p.80(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

An inept lion detective searches for a missing cat.After receiving his assignment from Ms. Chief (an elephant), Agent Lion takes two hours to reach the home of Fluffy's owner, Ms. Flamingo. (A map tracking his route from his office shows stops at fast-food joints and entertainment venues. Readers will note the more direct path he could have followed had distractions not beckoned.) Arriving on the scene, Agent Lion asks Ms. Flamingo ludicrous questions and posits absurd theories; checks for clues in unlikely places, including the refrigerator; and wreaks havoc when interviewing neighbors throughout her building. As the self-absorbed, doughnut-loving gumshoe continues his ridiculous investigation, Ms. Flamingo, patience gone, declares the unsolved case over. Still, she invites Agent Lion back to her apartment for tea. Dejectedly arranging the couch's pillows, Agent Lion finallyand unwittinglylocates Fluffy. All ends well as neighbors convene for a sweet celebration. This is a lightweight but humorous story; readers will chuckle at the silly questions Agent Lion asks and the witty, knowing comments he makes about cats. The ending, though predictable and unoriginal, satisfies. Lion is amusing; self-confident; and, as depicted in these delicate cartoon illustrations, very expressive, as are the other animal characters (including the beady-eyed pigeon Lion spies on a rooftop). Readers will also appreciate the endpapers' displays of mouthwatering doughnuts.Readers will enjoy watching this clueless detective get the "mane" job done in spite of himself. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

The creators of the Ladybug Girl series have entirely too much fun sending out an easily distracted detective in search of a missing cat and, more important, jelly donuts. Dispatched by his boss, Ms. Chief (ahem), to the apartment of Ms. Flamingo, who has reported the errant kitty, Agent Lion briskly gathers clues ("Does Fluffy have a trunk?" "Does he have antlers?"), checks out the surrounding area (pausing to pore over the latest issue of Jelly Donut Digest), and then returns empty-pawed to Ms. Flamingo's for tea. Sitting on her sofa, Agent Lion solves the mystery at last when the pillow on his lap begins to purr. "How can I ever thank you enough?" coos Ms. Flamingo. Well, "jelly donuts go particularly well with tea." Along with laying out mouthwatering donuts on the endpapers, Soman slips literary and other sight gags into his cartoon illustrations as he takes his leonine investigator, clad in trench coat and tiny fedora, from pillar to post. A delectable caper, reminiscent of a Marx Brothers romp for its speed and silliness. Grades K-2. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Dressed in a trench coat and fedora, Agent Lion has a cheery disposition and an ardent love for jelly doughnuts—but as a detective, he's got some shortcomings. Husband-and-wife creators Soman and Davis (the Ladybug Girl series) channel the old Pink Panther films but with an all-animal cast. Clear panel artwork provides plenty of comic contradiction as Agent Lion heads over to Ms. Flamingo's apartment building to talk to her about her missing cat, Fluffy. "He took the absolutely most direct route," the text says, while a double-page aerial view tells another story: Agent Lion makes stops at Donut World, Popcorn Palace, and more before arriving two hours later. "Does Fluffy have a trunk?" he asks Ms. Flamingo helpfully, and goofy scenarios follow: "No one move!" Agent Lion says, pointing to a rooftop creature. "Agent Lion," says an exasperated Ms. Flamingo, "That is a pigeon." After further investigations, and almost in spite of himself, Agent Lion solves the case. As a bonus, a spread of Ms. Flamingo's lobby features Easter eggs: an elephant cast as Christina in a version of the Wyeth painting, a monkey resembling Thompson's Eloise, and plentiful other animal heroes just right for curious readers. Ages 4–8. (Feb.)

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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